North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies, North Carolina State University, 151 Patton Avenue, Asheville, NC 28801, United States of America.
Department of Psychology, Appalachian State University, P.O. Box 32066, Boone, NC 28608, United States of America.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Jan 1;750:141702. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141702. Epub 2020 Aug 15.
Crisis text lines have proven to be an effective and low-cost means for delivering texting-based mental health support to youth. Yet there has been limited research examining the use of these services in capturing the psychological impact on youth affected by a weather-related disaster.
This ecologic study examined changes in help-seeking behavior for adolescents and young adults in North and South Carolina, USA, before and after Hurricane Florence (2018).
A retrospective, interrupted time-series design was used to examine pre- and post-hurricane changes in crisis text volume among youth help seekers in the Carolinas for the following outcomes: (1) text for any reason; (2) stress & anxiety; (3) depression; and (4) suicidal thoughts.
Results showed an immediate and sustained increase in crisis texts for stress/anxiety and suicidal thoughts in the six weeks following Florence. Overall, an immediate 15% increase in crisis texts for anxiety/stress (SE = 0.05, p = .005) and a 17% increase in suicidal thoughts (SE = 0.07, p = .02) occurred during the week of the storm. Text volume for anxiety/stress increased 17% (SE = 0.08, p = .005) and 23% for suicidal ideation (SE = 0.08, p = .01) in the 6-week post-hurricane period. Finally, forecast models revealed observed text volume for all mental health outcomes was higher than expected in the 6 weeks post-Florence.
A low-cost, crisis texting platform provided 24/7 mental health support available to young people in the Carolinas impacted by Hurricane Florence. These findings highlight a new application for text-based crisis support services to address the mental health consequences in youth following a weather-related disaster, as well as the potential for these types of crisis platforms to measure situational awareness in impacted communities.
危机短信热线已被证明是一种有效且低成本的方式,可以为年轻人提供基于短信的心理健康支持。然而,对于这些服务在捕捉受天气相关灾害影响的年轻人的心理影响方面的使用,研究有限。
本生态研究在美国北卡罗来纳州和南卡罗来纳州,考察了佛罗伦萨飓风(2018 年)前后青少年和年轻人寻求帮助行为的变化。
采用回顾性、中断时间序列设计,考察了卡罗莱纳州青年求助者在飓风前后以下结果的危机短信量变化:(1)因任何原因发送的短信;(2)压力和焦虑;(3)抑郁;(4)自杀念头。
结果显示,在佛罗伦萨飓风后的六周内,与压力/焦虑和自杀念头相关的危机短信立即且持续增加。总体而言,风暴周内,焦虑/压力相关的危机短信立即增加 15%(SE=0.05,p=0.005),自杀念头增加 17%(SE=0.07,p=0.02)。风暴后 6 周内,焦虑/压力的短信量增加了 17%(SE=0.08,p=0.005),自杀意念增加了 23%(SE=0.08,p=0.01)。最后,预测模型显示,在佛罗伦萨飓风后的 6 周内,所有心理健康结果的观察到的短信量都高于预期。
一个低成本、危机短信平台为受佛罗伦萨飓风影响的卡罗莱纳州的年轻人提供了 24/7 的心理健康支持。这些发现强调了基于文本的危机支持服务在应对与天气相关灾害后年轻人心理健康后果方面的新应用,以及这些类型的危机平台在衡量受灾社区的态势感知方面的潜力。